Total Pageviews

Showing posts with label Inventory. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Inventory. Show all posts

Saturday, June 1, 2013

[Inventory Collapse] 1Q 2013 Manhattan Sales Report

Posted by Jonathan Miller - Tuesday, April 2, 2013, 8:00 AM

We published our report on Manhattan market sales for 1Q 2013 today.   I’ve been writing this series for Douglas Elliman since 1994.

My Take

-Inventory remained near historic lows, seeing the largest year-over-year decline in the 12+ years we’ve tracked it.
-Sales increased despite drop in inventory – low mortgage rates and pent-up demand as key drivers.
-All price indicators increased from year ago levels – largely due to inventory near historic lows.
-Largest price increases since credit crunch began with exception of 2010's federal homeowner tax credit era.
-Days on market and listing discounts dropped as inventory declined.
-Luxury market had slower rate of decline in inventory (about half) than the overall market.

Here’s an excerpt from the report:

…The first quarter Manhattan housing market was defined by the acute shortage of inventory. As with many US housing markets, inventory in Manhattan has been falling for several years; this quarter, listing inventory posted its steepest year-over-year drop in the 12 years we’ve been recording it, declining 34.4% from the prior year quarter to 4,960. This was the ninth consecutive month and the 14th of the last 15 months that has shown a year-over-year decline in inventory. Despite the drop, number of sales increased 6.3% to 2,457 as consumers fought tight credit conditions to take advantage of low mortgage rates, and more still were incentivized by the rise in rental prices over the past two years…

The charts and data tables are updated to include the first quarter of 2013.

Here is some of the press coverage for the report today.

The Elliman Report: 1Q 2013 Manhattan Sales [Miller Samuel]
The Elliman Report: 1Q 2013 Manhattan Sales [Douglas Elliman]






View the original article here

Friday, September 28, 2012

Low Housing Inventory Is NOT A Sign of Housing Recovery

Posted by Jonathan Miller - Monday, July 9, 2012, 10:49 AM

I wrote “The Decline In Inventory Right Now is NOT a Good Sign” back in February, but there has been a more refined discussion about low inventory recently. Back then my orientation was more about the “robo-signing” scandal causing a drop in distressed listings as servicers held back supply – as well as the lack of confidence by sellers over whether they can achieve their price.

Stan Humphries, chief economist of Zillow has been a guest on my podcast and penned a great piece about it a few weeks ago called “The Connection Between Negative Equity, Inventory Shortage and Increasing Home Values: Why the Bottom Won’t Be as Boring as We Expected” tackling the impact of negative equity on inventory.

CoreLogic reported (via Nick Timiraos/WSJ) that the supply of homes for sale declines as negative equity increases.

David Rosenberg, chief economist as Gluskin-Sheff, and whom I had the pleasure of meeting with for dinner a few months ago, presented a great series of charts in his newsletter (via ZeroHedge).

It basically presents the idea that “upside-downers” ie those with negative equity, can’t list their homes for sale because they don’t have equity (or enough equity) for the next one.

Here’s the most compelling excerpt:

According to data cited by the USA Today, the supply backlog where over half of homeowners are “upside down” on their mortgage is at 4.7 months’; in areas where “upside down” borrowers make up less than 10% of the market, the listed inventory is closer to 8.3 months’ supply.

In other words, in markets with unusually tight inventory, prices are being “goosed” higher, not because the housing market is improving, but because there are fewer houses in the game. Low mortgage rates are artificially creating excess demand, with those buyers fighting over the slim pickings of sellers who can actually sell.

That, my friends, is NOT a housing recovery.

More visuals:

The Decline In Inventory Right Now is NOT a Good Sign [Matrix]
David Rosenberg Explains The Housing “Recovery” [Zero Hedge]
The Connection Between Negative Equity, Inventory Shortage and Increasing Home Values: Why the Bottom Won’t Be as Boring as We Expected [Zillow Real Estate Research]
Why Aren’t There More Homes for Sale? [WSJ Developments Blog/Nick Timiraos]






View the original article here

Sunday, February 19, 2012

The Decline In Inventory Right Now is NOT a Good Sign

Posted by Jonathan J. Miller -Monday, February 13, 2012, 6:00 AM
12 Comments

There was a 21.2% decline in listing inventory from December 2010 to December 2011.

Relying on typical housing market scenarios and reasonable logic, a decline in listing inventory nearly always meant a tightening market was developing – fewer houses coming on line matched against steady demand meant housing prices were more likely to stabilize or rise.

Declining inventory is the variable in the housing equation that usually makes conditions improve. During the mid-decade housing boom, falling inventory was caused by the insatiable demand by buyers – product could not get out to the market fastest enough. Listing inventory was simply “worked off” by (artificially) inflated demand. Listing discounts approached zero, days on market fell to record lows and prices rose rapidly.

Old scenario: Declining Listing Inventory = declining housing prices ease their decline, prices stabilize or prices rise.

However over the last year, listing inventory fell sharply in many markets yet sales were generally anemic or showing nominal increases. In the NAR numbers, non-seasonally adjusted sales were up 1.4% year over year (using NSA since inventory is also NSA) yet inventory was down 21.2%. Inventory was clearly not declining because sales were overpowering the amount of listing inventory that was available.

Then why is inventory declining?

The answer to this question was not considered in the recent prediction of a market bottom.

New scenario: Declining Listing Inventory = fall in seller confidence and the sharp decline in distressed inventory entering the market.

From NAR…

Total housing inventory at the end of December dropped 9.2 percent to 2.38 million existing homes available for sale, which represents a 6.2-month supply2 at the current sales pace, down from a 7.2-month supply in November.

“The inventory supply suggests many markets will see prices stabilize or grow moderately in the near future,” Yun said. – National Association of Realtors

We are seeing unusual declines in many markets I keep tabs on such as:

Admittedly I am cherry picking some of the cities that are posting huge declines in inventory. However the problem I find in all of these markets, is that sales are only increasing a few percentage points. Not nearly enough to explain the rapid decline.

The drops are being touted as a good sign that housing is getting back on its feet. I’m not so sure.

I think the sharp drop in many US housing markets (and this has been happening for much of 2011) has to do with three key reasons:

A large swath of foreclosure volume was artificially delayed.Seller confidence has waned after the pounding it took last fall.Low interest rates extended by the Fed for the next two years have removed any sense of urgency.

Declining foreclosure volume is one of the key reason inventory levels are dropping. The 1/3 decline in foreclosure volume in 2011 has resulted in a sharp drop in foreclosure inventory resulting in a sharp drop in total inventory. Distressed sales have been running at about 30% of total sales nationally for a few years but fell to about 20% in 2011. With a 2 million more homes expected to go into foreclosure over the next 2 years, a year long internal review of procedure after the 2010 “robo-signing” scandal and the 50 State AG settlement with the largest services/banks, distressed inventory is expected to rise sharply over the next several years.

Weak seller confidence is causing property not to be released into the market unless the need to sell is not optional. The 2011 home seller and buyer was bashed with the debt ceiling debate, the S&P downgrade of US debt, 400 point daily swings in the financial markets, the European debt crisis, the AG/Service settlement drama and the political stalemate on housing policy in Washington. What do people do when faced with the unknown? They sit and wait. Buyers had a lot more incentive to act with falling mortgage rates to record levels but mortgage underwriting grew tighter over the year as well.

The extension of the low interest rate policy by the Fed through the end of 2014 has obliterated any sense of urgency by sellers. I am getting a lot of feedback from real estate professionals about this as well as seeing it within my own appraisal practice. There is a lot going on the world right now and the action by the Fed suggested that they weren’t particularly encouraged by the economy. To many this may seem as an incentive for sellers to get going and sell. But many of those sellers have to buy.

The drop in inventory as a phenomenon may or may not pass quickly but one thing is clear – weird changes in market behavior happen for a reason – I don’t see declining inventory as a particular sign of strength in the housing market.


View the original article here

Tuesday, September 27, 2011

Quotes: Dawn of the Shadow Inventory!

× Like us and you'll find top breaking news in your Facebook newsfeed. Sign up for our daily email newsletter and get top stories and breaking news delivered to your inbox. Tuesday, September 20, 2011, by Anna Marie

9-20-11unhappy.jpgIt’s not a B-reel Harry Potter movie, folks; it’s a phenomenon by which the number of Notices of Default filed in August in the U.S. has spiked dramatically-- an overall increase of 116% --to the highest level in a year. An August 2011 ForeclosureRadar report shows that the Notices of Default (NOD) or Notices of Trustee Sale(TS) rose in nearly every state, with California’s NODs jumping 69.5% and TSs jumping 6.06% over the previous month. Alameda County Realtor Pacita Dimacali localizes the issue: “In my neck of the woods, the jump is even more dramatic”: NODs in Alameda County climbed to 71.97% over the previous month, while TS numbers grew 7.78% .“Just as we were seeing a slowing down of NODs and TSs, we are now rudely awakened by the drastic upward spike. We can assume that many loans are re-setting, and the property owners are unable to meet the higher mortgage payments. But [so many] in one month?”
· Dawn of the shadow inventory: a significant upswing in Notices of Default filed in California [Active Rain]
· ForeclosureRadar [website]


View the original article here

Thursday, May 26, 2011

AM Linkage: Bike to Work Day Tomorrow!; Smart & Final Gets Better Inventory; BART Wants to Embrace Tech; More!

× Like us and you'll find top breaking news in your Facebook newsfeed. Sign up for our daily email newsletter and get top stories and breaking news delivered to your inbox.

View the original article here